Hanasaku Iroha 25 — Balut’s not on the Menu

Goofing Around

The fact that the creators can consistently make excellent drama when they try makes me wonder: what were they thinking with the other episodes? I can’t help but feel that this show would have fared better as one-cour rather than two.

I mean, what was the point of half of the episodes? Take the Nako episode as an example. Nothing much happened. That isn’t damning in and of itself, if you’re going to further develop the characters. But that didn’t happen here. We learned that Nako is shy and takes care of her family, which we already knew. She has some inner struggles with trying to change, but decides to stay the same. So we end up exactly where we started.

This might have been a good way to reinforce Nako’s character, but it took up too much time for this. In general, I think that the non-dramatic episodes could have either been much tighter or eliminated entirely without much of a detrimental effect to the show as a whole. This episode’s Nako, who interrupted the argument with a yell, could just have easily been the Nako from twelve episodes ago with no one the wiser.

The creators have demonstrated that they can tell a great story when they try, and this made the meandering around seem all the more wasteful.

Siding with the Boss

On to this episode. Ohana agrees with her grandmother that the inn should continue in the same vein as before, and is consequently shunned by everyone else in the inn (except Beanman).

Color me impressed. I didn’t expect things to go in this direction, but it’s a great way to wrap up many of the loose threads:

Ohana’s decision to stay at Kissuiso or return to Tokyo with her mother / Ko

The closing / continuation of the Kissuiso

Change at the Kissuiso

Ohana’s love life, with the Bonbori festival

The relationships between the three generations of Ohana’s family, by having them all work as waitresses

We also get a conflict with some very interesting sides: Ohana and her grandmother vs. everyone else. And wow, they are harsh on her. As in, everyone is acting like Minko. They won’t even participate in the festival. Even Tohru joins in on bullying Ohana.

Ohana is at her finest when she’s being bullied though.

Of course, the entire staff overstretches itself, and they aren’t able to keep up. They have to resort to a buffet, and overexert themselves and make themselves miserable to deliver worse service than usual. Then they get in to a huge fight, but fortunately Ohana’s grandmother and mother step in to make the save.

We have all three generations working as waitresses. A nice way to wrap things up on this side of the story. Ohana, her grandmother, and her mother’s relationships have all improved dramatically over the course of the series.

Hanasaku Iroha has always been at its finest when its main cast is in conflict, and this episode was no exception.

Shipping

How many doujinshis will this episode spawn?

Further Thoughts

That was some great narration by the novelist in the middle of the fight.

Takako is keeping Enishi under control. Not someone you want to mess with.

We learned what Beanman and the novelist do all day: help people park.

What was up with that music at the end? Choral music with an organ accompaniment is not exactly what I would associate with the Bonbori festival…

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4 thoughts on “Hanasaku Iroha 25 — Balut’s not on the Menu”

The music at the end felt awkward, like something bad was going to happen…

I thought the pacing was a little fast, because, hey, everyone disliked Ohana all of a sudden. And the stuff about change. If we would’ve been able to see these changes in one or two episodes, it would have a bigger impact, instead of this little ” mini time skip” (a couple of days) we got.
But nonetheless, it was great to see something happen, and this is just me nagging the details for no apparent reason.

“The fact that the creators can consistently make excellent drama when they try makes me wonder: what were they thinking with the other episodes?”

It says it all. I mean, you only need to look at the openings for potential good drama/slice of life that never happened!

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Something I really wished for, but seemingly no-one else has (at least not what I’ve seen), is the Inn itself to become a main character. No, I don’t mean it should talk :p
What I mean is, that I would like to see all of it. How it’s built, how big it is, all the rooms and so on. It would be great, because it would make you feel closer to it.

You know, that’s a really good point. Half of the show is about how much the various characters love the inn. But it’s really hard to relate to that when we know very little about the inn itself. We’ve seen various rooms of the inn, but I don’t think we’ve ever gotten a good sense of the layout or feel of the building as a whole. It would make the audience relate much more if we actually felt like we knew the place. I have no sense of the inn’s (or the town’s geography) at all.

The episode was a bit on the fast side, but I didn’t really mind. I’ll take fast over slow any day.